Volunteering/Community Service

Volunteering and Educational Performance: The Link

A new fact sheet by Davila and Mora investigates the effect of school required community service on academic performance. The authors found positive links between the two, providing solid research for community service advocates.

  • Students who participated in school required community service were 22 percentage points more likely to graduate from college than those that did not and were more likely to have improved their Reading, Math, Science, and History scores.
  • Similarly, students who performed voluntary community service were 19 percentage points more likely to graduate from college than thos that did not.

Read more results about the positive link between civic engagement and educational attainment here.

Volunteering Trends & Statistics
According to the 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation, 36% of young people, ages 15 to 25, volunteered in the past year.1

Of these young volunteers, only 19% report volunteering on a regular basis.

Volunteering rates by student status:

  • Current high school student: 47%
  • Current college student: 43%
  • Not a current student: 23%

Young females are 4 percentage points more likely than males to report volunteering in the past year.

19% of young people have worked within the last year "informally with some one or some group to solve a problem in the community" where they live. This is about the same rate as among older people.

Only 10% are confident that they personally can make a great deal of difference in solving community problems, although another 45% believe they can make some difference.

Young people are more confident about collaborative work: 44% believe that "people working together" can make a great deal of difference in solving local problems.

Where Young People Volunteer

Organizations involving youth (67%) draw the greatest numbers of young volunteers, followed by civic or community organizations (54%) and then religious groups (49%). Political organizations tend to draw the fewest youth volunteers (13%).

Source: 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation

Wyoming, Utah, and Wisconsin had the three highest youth volunteer rates in 2005.

Source: CIRCLE's tabulations from the Current Population Survey, September Supplement, 2005.

Motivations for Volunteering

Overall, young people who participated in political organizations (just 13% of the young volunteers) were most likely to be motivated by the desire to address a social or political problem.

Most young people who volunteered for other types of organizations wanted to help other people. For example, young people who volunteered for environmental organizations generally did so to help other people (52%), not to address a social or political problem (23%).

Source: 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation

How to Encourage Volunteering Among Young People
Invitations please…
Being asked is the top reason motivating young people to volunteer (closely followed by "because it makes me feel good.") In 2006, political organizations were also the most likely to recruit their volunteers by reaching out to them. In the other groups, young volunteers tended to make the initial contact.

Role Models…
Young people who grow up in a household where someone volunteers are twice as likely to volunteer regularly, to be an active member of a group, and are more likely to follow politics and vote.

Let's Discuss!
Young people who discuss a volunteer experience are twice as likely as others to volunteer regularly. And, they are also 16 percentage points more likely to try to influence someone's vote!

Sources: The Civic and Political Health of the Nation: A Generational Portrait & 2006 Civic and Political Health of the Nation

What Young People think about New Volunteer Programs and Policies

Young adults are enthusiastic about an expanded AmeriCorps type program - where every young person would be offered a chance to do a full year of community service to earn money for tuition.

However, the majority of young people oppose community service as a requirement for high school graduation. Source: Volunteering Among Young People

1 It is important to note that in recent years efforts to measure volunteering have produced widely different estimates, largely because of the methods employed to measure volunteering.


For more information on volunteering/ community service:

Consensus Report:
The Civic Mission of Schools (released by CIRCLE & Carnegie Corporation of New York)

Factsheets:

An Assessment of Civic Engagement and Educational Attainment

Volunteering Among Young People

How Individuals Begin Volunteering

Time Spent in Volunteer Activity: 2002 and 2003

Youth Volunteering in the States: 2002 to 2006

Youth Attitudes Towards Civic Education and Community Service Requirements

Civic Engagement Among Minority Youth

Working Paper:

Civic Engagement and High School Academic Progress: An Analysis Using NELS

Do Gender and Ethnicity Affect Civic Engagement and Academic Progress?


The Civic Bonding of School and Family: An Evaluation of Kids Voting USA

Research Report:
The Civic and Political Health of the Nation: A Generational Portrait